Townsville Bulletin

2019 ‘broke heat records’

Experts warn of extreme weather

- DAVID MILLS

AUSTRALIAN­S are being warned to brace for longer fire seasons, more intense shortdurat­ion heavy rainfall events, and fewer but more extreme tropical cyclones.

The country had 43 extremely warm days in 2019, more than triple the number it experience­d in any year prior to 2000, a new report into the country’s weather has found.

The biennial State of the Climate Report from the Bureau of Meteorolog­y and CSIRO, released today, reveals 2019 was Australia’s hottest year on record, with 33 days in which the national daily maximum average temperatur­e exceeded 39C.

This total number of extremely hot days is “more than the number observed from 1960 to 2018 combined, which totalled 24 days,” the report stated.

Dr Karl Braganza from the Bureau of Meteorolog­y said 2019 was our hottest year “by a reasonable margin” but 2020 was “not tracking to beat 2019”.

“It’s not going to be our warmest year on record, but it will be another warm year,” he said.

There had also been a “significan­t increase in the frequency of dangerous fire weather days across Australia, particular­ly during spring and summer, leading to an earlier start to the southern fire season”, Dr Braganza said.

The report says Australia’s climate has warmed by 1.44C since 1910 (with an almost quarter degree margin of error) — a more exact estimate than the 2018 edition of the report, which said Australia’s climate had warmed by just over 1°C.

Global sea levels have risen by 25cm since 1880. The oceans around Australia are acidifying and have warmed by about 1°C since 1910, the experts found.

Dr Jaci Brown from the CSIRO said half the sea level rise since 1880 had occurred after 1970, and the sea level was currently rising by 3.5cm each decade.

Dr Brown said the sea level rise was partially explained by the melting polar ice caps, but also thermal expansion.

“As the water warms it expands, contributi­ng to sea level rise,” she said.

Despite the drop in greenhouse gas emissions associated with 2020’s Covid-related economic slowdown, the report says the decrease would have “negligible impact”.

“Although carbon dioxide [emissions] did slow down we still saw an increase … and that slowdown is indistingu­ishable from the background noise,” Dr Brown said.

She likened the situation to a long-term junk food addict who switched to a healthy diet and stepped on the bathroom scales the next day expecting to see a radical drop in their weight.

Dr Braganza said one of the themes of this year’s report was that “Australia is experienci­ng climate change now”.

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